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Big Ten expansion means revenue estimate spikes, especially with the College Football Playoff, per report

Keith Farner

By Keith Farner

Published:

The Big Ten expansion will unleash a cascade of revenue spikes around college football, and one estimate already puts a price tag on the move.

Dennis Dodd of CBS Sports reported that Southern Cal and UCLA moving to the Big Ten immediately elevates the previous $1 billion annual revenue estimate to at least in the range of $1.28 billion to $1.6 billion. What’s more, the College Football Playoff annual average value is in the neighborhood of $600 million.

The Associated Press reported last month, before the expansion was announced, that ESPNโ€™s current deal with the CFP pays about $470 million per year. ESPN has separate contracts with the Rose, Sugar and Orange bowls that up the networkโ€™s total layout to more than $600 million annually to be the television home of college footballโ€™s most important postseason games.

However, revenue is one of the issues still to be decided during CFP negotiations.

How revenue would be distributed in a new model was not part of the detailed proposal the CFP unveiled last month, and the proposed 12-team model is still steps away from final approval from the university presidents and chancellors who oversee the CFP. Also, the current TV contract with ESPN runs through the 2025-26 season. Until then the CFP cannot take its new format to market.

Keith Farner

A former newspaper veteran, Keith Farner is a news manager for Saturday Down South.

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